( NEXSTAR ) – After months of anticipation, a total solar eclipse will darken skies over the United States on Monday, April 8, and the awe- inspiring phenomenon will stream live in the player above once it starts.
Whether you just have a limited view or skies are in the forecast, you can also enjoy a life look from the way of sum, as captured by Nexstar’s facilities.
The sun will go directly between Earth and the sun, leaving a around 115-mile dark path as the eclipse moves initially over Mexico, finally moves over the United States and Canada. The path’s way will pass through the sky at dawn or dusk, as it would usually do.
When will it be accessible?
Texas will be the site of the total solar eclipse, with the limited sdk set to occur shortly after noon local time. Next up will become Oklahoma, Arkansas, Missouri, Illinois, Kentucky, Indiana, Ohio, Pennsylvania, New York, Vermont, New Hampshire, and Maine.
Tennessee and Michigan are thought to be in the sum way, too.
For each of the following cities along the path, the eclipse timings are shown in limited and complete:
Place | Partial Begins | Totality Begins | Maximum | Duration |
Austin, Texas | 12: 17: 14 PM CDT | 1: 36: 12 PM CDT | 1: 37: 02 PM CDT | 1 seconds, 40.3 secs |
Idabel, Oklahoma | 12: 28: 14 PM CDT | 1: 45: 23 PM CDT | 1: 47: 33 PM CDT | 4 mins, 18.4 secs |
Little Rock, Arkansas | 12: 33: 33 PM CDT | 1: 51: 38 PM CDT | 1: 52: 51 PM Cds | 2 mins, 26.6 secs |
Poplar Bluff, Missouri | 12: 39: 44 PM CDT | 1: 56: 21 PM CDT | 1: 58: 25 PM CDT | 4 mins, 7.8 secs |
Carbondale, Illinois | 12: 43: 01 PM CDT | 1: 59: 17 PM CDT | 2: 01: 21 PM CDT |  , 4 mins, 8.3 secs |
Paducah, Kentucky | 12: 43: 00 PM CDT | 2: 00: 50 PM CDT | 2: 01: 36 PM CDT | 1 mins, 31.1 secs |
Indianapolis, Indiana | 1: 50: 34 PM EDT | 3: 06: 04 PM EDT | 3: 07: 59 PM EDT | 3 mins, 49.4 secs |
Cleveland, Ohio | 1: 59: 22 PM EDT | 3: 13: 46 PM EDT | 3: 15: 40 PM EDT | 3 mins, 48.9 secs |
Erie, Pennsylvania | 2: 02: 26 PM EDT | 3: 16: 23 PM EDT | 3: 18: 14 PM EDT | 3 mins, 41.8 secs |
Syracuse, New York | 2: 09: 02 PM EDT | 3: 23: 05 PM EDT | 3: 23: 47 PM EDT | 1 mins, 24.5 secs |
Montpelier, Vermont | 2: 15: 00 PM EDT | 3: 27: 39 PM EDT | 3: 28: 27 PM EDT | 1 mins, 35.4 secs |
An additional specific sdk
All , total solar eclipses , are n’t the same, and this year’s is setting up to be especially remarkable, NASA says.
” The sdk in 2024 could be even more interesting due to differences in the way, schedule, and academic research”, NASA wrote on its , website.
During this year’s solar eclipse, the sun will get closer to Earth than it was during the 2017 occasion, more obscuring the sun’s rays and creating a wider path of sum.
About 31.6 million people are in the sum journey this year, up from 12 million during the most recent total solar eclipse, as a result of the larger route across the United States and the path the eclipse will travel through more densely populated areas.
According to NASA, 99 % of people living in the U. S. will get the opportunity to see at least a limited view of the eclipse. Totality will last longer this time for those in the way, with some areas experiencing more than four minutes of darkness.
Lastly, there’s the sun’s action, which is coming at a great time.
In 2017, thermal engagement was at a minimum, but this year, sdk viewers will get an extra treat as the sun becomes more engaged with feasible” streamers flowing in to the thermal atmosphere” from behind the moon’s shadow, according to NASA.
Additionally, “viewers may have a better chance to observe prominences coming from the Sun, which can be seen as bright red locks or loops,” according to NASA. There might even be a chance to witness a coronal mass ejection, which is a massive solar material eruption, during the eclipse, with good timing.
As the sdk develops across the United States on Monday, you can find life changes, videos and graphics below.